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Congratulations to Cleantech Open 2013 Regional Finalists

Will a startup finally make fusion energy a reality? The 2013 Cleantech Open has judged this and other companies worthy of advancing to a national competition in November.

The finalists named below all completed an accelerator program for cleantech startups that began this summer. Each regional finalist wins a prize package with a mix of seed investment and in-kind services worth up to $20,000. On November 19 two dozen winners from eight regions around the U.S. will convene in San Jose, CA to network with potential investors and vie for prizes as large as $200,000 in value. Since 2006, 727 startups have completed Cleantech Open programs.

Pacific Northwest

(Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington)

The Pacific Northwest regional winners were announced at an event in downtown Portland, OR.

Phytelligence, Pullman, WA

From left to right: Dr. Amit Dinghra and Tyson Koepke of Phytelligence with award presenters John Fleming of Wells Fargo and Jennifer Spaith of Dorsey Whitney. (CTO photo)

This Washington State University spinoff appeals to my alter-ego sustainable forester with a head-start program for tree seedlings. Phytelligence has developed a way to start young trees (commercial plantings for timber, fruit and nuts) faster and better than conventional methods.

By minimizing mix-ups, reducing mortality and reducing time to tree delivery from over five years to under two, their innovation can result in significant additional revenue for the farmer. They already have achieved significant validation and early-stage investment from their customers.

Helion Energy, Redmond, WA

From right to left: Chris Pihl and Dr. David Kirtley of Helion Energy with award presenter Jennifer Spaith of Dorsey Whitney. (CTO photo)

A team with lengthy experience from University of Washington and Mathematical Sciences Northwest have developed a break-through fusion energy device. You know about fusion energy, the clean power source that’s always 50 years and 50 billion dollars from commercialization. Helion Energy has designed their device from the top down to be practical using well-understood physics.

I spoke with founder Dr. David Kirtley at the awards event. He explained that Helion Energy’s fusion technology will be commercially deployable within six years. Their new approach generates fusion by accelerating two specialized plasmas into a central chamber where they are further compressed with a magnetic field, raising heat and density to levels required for self-sustaining fusion and energy release.

Dr. Kirtley says the power plant design is compact, modular and competitive in today’s market. The Helion Energy machine runs on a fuel found in every day water — a molecular variant of hydrogen.

Unlike nuclear fission, scientists believe fusion reactions will use very small amounts of fuel and leave behind relatively little toxic waste. Helion’s technology has received $5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy.

Western Region

(California, Nevada, Hawaii)

Out of its 96 entrants, the Western region named four semifinalists at an event in Fremont, CA, and included a networking mixer at the Tesla factory.

Dragonfly Systems eliminates mismatch losses on large solar installations through power electronics devices installed on the back of each solar module. They cost-effectively boost power output and enhance O&M through high-resolution data collection.

Polymer Green

PolymerGreen provides a superior way to handle all types of waste plastic, especially those that are low grade, difficult to recycle, end of life, or unsorted. Their solution turns low-value waste plastic to high-value alternative fuels, eliminating waste and capturing value. Polymer Green also won the Audience Choice Award.

PowWow Energy

PowWow Energy allows farmers and ranchers to quickly detect water leaks that can destroy an entire crop or damage property. Unlike competing solutions that use hardware sensors, PowWow’s the software-as-a-service (SaaS) mines data from smart power meters attached to water pumps using the Green Button standard interface and proprietary algorithms. It quickly detects anomalies and sends alarm text messages in case of failures. pays for itself in water and energy savings.

TylerCo, Inc.

TylerCo’s BANFAlite is a direct replacement for existing 4ft T-8 and T-12 lamps. The BANFAlite LED replacement lamp has produced documented savings of greater than 90 percent over existing typical traditional fluorescent fixtures with just a simple lamp change. The motion sensor technology in each lamp instantly transforms existing fixtures into bi-level energy-saving devices. Power consumption drops to 5 watts when stairwells are unoccupied and 25 watts when occupied.

The Midwest Regions selected finalists from a field of 21 startups. Finalists were announced at the 4th Annual Midwest Innovation Summit event in Minneapolis, which convened over 75 innovators including the 2013 accelerator class of start-ups with investors and corporate managers, media, civic leaders and many others from throughout the Midwestern business community.

Trash 2 Cash Energy, Tampa, FL — Catalytic production of renewable feedstock to energy. Received both finalist and sustainability awards.

Fiveworx, Knoxville, TN — Fiveworx is the developer of a product called “Do 5 Things,” is a marketing optimization platform for utilities looking to increase rebate redemption and encourage behavior change.

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Published by Denis Du Bois

Denis Du Bois lives in the Seattle area. He specializes in helping tech companies to clearly communicate the value of their innovations. Denis and his family enjoy active weekends at their off-grid solar getaway in the Cascade Mountains.
View all posts by Denis Du Bois